Here are two arguments being put forward in Manitoba. One from the NFU, and one from the Keystone Agriculture Producers.
"NFU Calls for Review of Packer Ownership of Cattle
The National Farmers Union is calling on Ottawa to follow the U.S. lead and look at the issue of competition within the Canadian beef packing industry.
The NFU report "The Farm Crisis and the Cattle Sector: Toward a New Analysis and a New Solution" looks at factors contributing to the current low cattle prices.
Manitoba coordinator Fred Tait says packer control of cattle has allowed them to affect spot price and he is encouraged by the Obama administration's consideration of ending the ability of packers to use captive supply to regulate markets.
We're recommending that the federal government bring the packers, the retailers before a committee of the House of Commons and let's see how this system is working and look at ways of improving it.
If we’re going to have a free market system then that free market systems has to be a free market system not freedom for farmers to have to compete against one another and an assurance that packers don't.
Tait notes Nilsson Brothers has an application before the competition Bureau to buy out the Tyson operations in Canada which, if approved, will concentrate control of slaughter capacity in the hands of two companies.
He suggests, if the U.S. administration is going to limit packer ownership of cattle then Canada is going to have to follow suit."
Then there's the other side..........
"KAP Rejects Calls for Limits on Packer Ownership of Cattle
Keystone Agricultural Producers is rejecting calls for government legislation to restrict the ability of beef processing plants to own cattle.
A National Farmers Union report identifies packer control of the cattle supply as the main reason for low prices and calls on government to restrict packers' ability to own cattle.
KAP president Ian Wishart agrees the lack of competition has been a factor but he doesn't believe legislative restrictions on the ownership of cattle is the route to take.
There have been U.S. states that were concerned about that and, in fact, a few U.S. states that passed legislation to restrict packers’ ability to own cattle in feedlots.
It hasn’t been terribly effective and any legislation such as they propose would probably have a fairly major impact on how big multinationals looked at our market place as some place they wanted to operate in.
Wishart acknowledges, in terms of returns for the cow calf-producer, it's been bad every year since BSE hit.
He believes legislative changes to deal with BSE have had a greater impact on profitability than packer control of cattle supply and he suggests the added costs of addressing BSE have been borne by the cow-calf producer."
As far as I'm concerned, KAP is way out to lunch on this one.
"NFU Calls for Review of Packer Ownership of Cattle
The National Farmers Union is calling on Ottawa to follow the U.S. lead and look at the issue of competition within the Canadian beef packing industry.
The NFU report "The Farm Crisis and the Cattle Sector: Toward a New Analysis and a New Solution" looks at factors contributing to the current low cattle prices.
Manitoba coordinator Fred Tait says packer control of cattle has allowed them to affect spot price and he is encouraged by the Obama administration's consideration of ending the ability of packers to use captive supply to regulate markets.
We're recommending that the federal government bring the packers, the retailers before a committee of the House of Commons and let's see how this system is working and look at ways of improving it.
If we’re going to have a free market system then that free market systems has to be a free market system not freedom for farmers to have to compete against one another and an assurance that packers don't.
Tait notes Nilsson Brothers has an application before the competition Bureau to buy out the Tyson operations in Canada which, if approved, will concentrate control of slaughter capacity in the hands of two companies.
He suggests, if the U.S. administration is going to limit packer ownership of cattle then Canada is going to have to follow suit."
Then there's the other side..........
"KAP Rejects Calls for Limits on Packer Ownership of Cattle
Keystone Agricultural Producers is rejecting calls for government legislation to restrict the ability of beef processing plants to own cattle.
A National Farmers Union report identifies packer control of the cattle supply as the main reason for low prices and calls on government to restrict packers' ability to own cattle.
KAP president Ian Wishart agrees the lack of competition has been a factor but he doesn't believe legislative restrictions on the ownership of cattle is the route to take.
There have been U.S. states that were concerned about that and, in fact, a few U.S. states that passed legislation to restrict packers’ ability to own cattle in feedlots.
It hasn’t been terribly effective and any legislation such as they propose would probably have a fairly major impact on how big multinationals looked at our market place as some place they wanted to operate in.
Wishart acknowledges, in terms of returns for the cow calf-producer, it's been bad every year since BSE hit.
He believes legislative changes to deal with BSE have had a greater impact on profitability than packer control of cattle supply and he suggests the added costs of addressing BSE have been borne by the cow-calf producer."
As far as I'm concerned, KAP is way out to lunch on this one.
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